Adrian Hegeman Plant Metabolomics Assistant Professor Phone: 612.626.3650 Email: hegem007@umn.edu
Address
290 Alderman Hall
1970 Folwell Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55108
Education
Ph.D., University
of Wisconsin-Madison,
2001, Biochemistry
B.A., Oberlin College,
1992, Biochemistry
Research Interests
Introduction: Why all the Phytochemicals?
Plants, as sessile organisms, must be able
to cope with a broad array of stressful environmental conditions that motile
organisms can overcome by simply changing location. As a result,
plants exhibit numerous chemical strategies to moderate environmental
stress. Plants cannot run away from herbivores, but many synthesize toxic
or unpalatable chemicals as feeding deterrents. Plants cannot relocate
when nutrients are depleted, yet many can synthesize and excrete compounds into
the soil that help liberate nutrients such as phosphate or iron as
needed. Other chemicals are synthesized that help provide protection from
fungal or bacterial infection, excess UV light exposure, and freezing or
drought conditions. In addition, plants synthesize a wide array of
chemicals to influence the behavior of other organisms. The more obvious
of these being pigment, odor and flavor compounds in fruits and flowers that
promote pollination and seed dispersal. Less apparent are the chemicals
involved in interactions with other plants, fungi or bacteria.
Phytochemicals (chemicals produced by plants) that influence the behavior of
other organisms are profoundly important to people, not just because of
pharmaceutical or commercially useful compounds, but because of those that make
up the colors, flavors and odors that effect the quality of our food and
surroundings.
Metabolomics to Study the Regulation of
Secondary Metabolite Production
My laboratory uses high throughput chemical
analysis to measure hundreds to thousands of compounds simultaneously in plant
extracts. Conceptually, we attempt to make as many simultaneous unbiased
measurements as is possible to allow analysis of metabolism in an entire
biological system. This methodology, called metabolomics is
related to other systems biology approaches such as genomics and proteomics,
which also attempt to provide comprehensive descriptions of the molecular
status of a biological system as an initial step prior to formulation of hypotheses
and more traditional lines of scientific inquiry. The approach
essentially looks at a biological system with new eyes provided by state of the
art analytical technologies to create an image of a life processes that were
not previously observable. We are interested in utilizing metabolomics to
understand the means and regulation of production of secondary metabolites as a
critical first step in finding out how an organism responds to its
environment. We have started our analysis of secondary metabolism in
Arabidopsis thaliana because, from a molecular perspective, it is the best
characterized plant systems. As of 2005 there were over 170 secondary
metabolites identified in Arabidopsis; this number was only 36 a decade
earlier (D’Auria, J. C. and Gershenzon, J. (2005) Current Opinion in Plant
Biology, 8: 308-316.). There is reason to believe that the
complete set of secondary metabolites has not yet been documented even in this
well characterized system. Our initial studies focus on a specific cell
type called the trichome. These cells form hair-like or branching
structures that are present on the surfaces of many plants. Often these
cells are specialized for synthesizing secondary metabolites that are either
stored at the leaf surface or excreted as an herbivore deterrent.
Trichomes are one of the few plant cell types (including pollen) that can be
collected free from other contaminating cell types.
Using Stable Isotopic Metabolic Labeling
for Systems Biology
Metabolomics is a fairly young discipline,
which was conceived within the past decade in a post-genomics context.
Metabolomics depends heavily on rapidly changing analytical
methodologies. As a result, many of the resources for the field are still
in development. A major interest of mine for the past year has concerned
the creation of isotope-assisted metabolomics tools and resources that can take
advantage of our capacity to metabolically label plant materials with stable
isotopes. With our collaborators at the University
of Wisconsin
Madison Metabolomics Consortium
(http://mmcd.nmrfam.wisc.edu/main.html
) we have described two strategies for increasing both the usable mass range,
and the confidence of mass spectral feature formula assignments using
isotopically labeled metabolites from plants. These resources are
publicly accessible at the Biological Magnetic Resonance Data Bank web site (http://www.bmrb.wisc.edu/metabolomics/
).
Subtle changes protein or metabolite
abundance can be measured in a high-throughput manner using stable isotopic
labeling in combination with mass spectrometry. Fundamentally, existing
quantitative approaches rely on the incorporation of a stable isotopic label
into peptides so that one can observe differences in a control versus test
samples by comparing the intensities of matched pairs of mass spectral
peaks. These peaks correspond to chemically identical species that
co-elute in all chromatographic steps (in the case of 15N and 13C
labeled samples where the isotope effects are minimal), and share
physico-chemical properties pertaining to ionization and detection in the
spectrometer, yet are distinguishable by mass. This allows one to compare
relative quantities for all labeled species in a sample with distinguishable
masses. Metabolic labeling provides additional advantages with regard to
sample preparation over other labeling strategies. Heavy and light
labeled tissues are mixed immediately following collection, and so the samples
have the perfect internal control for protein extraction and fractionation that
can be major sources of error for in vitro labeling approaches.
Selected Publications
·
Hegeman, A. D., Schulte, C. F., Cui, Q.,
Lewis, I. A., Huttlin, E. L., Eghbalnia, H., Harms, A. C., Ulrich, E. L.,
Markley, J. L., and Sussman, M. R. (2007) Stable Isotope Assisted Assignment of
Elemental Compositions for Metabolomics, Anal. Chem., 79(18),
6912-21.
·
Nelson, C. J., Huttlin, E. L., Hegeman,
A. D., Harms, A. C., and Sussman, M. R. (2007) Implications of 15N-Metabolic
Labeling for Automated Peptide Identification in Arabidopsis thaliana,
Proteomics, 7(8), 1279-92.
·
Huttlin, E. L., Hegeman, A. D., Harms,
A. C., and Sussman, M. R. (2007) Comparison of full versus partial metabolic
labeling for quantitative proteomic analysis in Arabidopsis thaliana, Mol.
Cell Proteomics, 6(5), 860-81.
·
Hegeman, A. D., Rodriguez, M., Han B.
W., Uno, Y., Phillips G. N. Jr., Hrabak, E. M., John C. Cushman, Harper, J. F.,
Harmon, A. C., and Sussman, M. R. (2006) A phyloproteomic characterization of
in vitro autophosphorylation in calcium-dependent protein kinases. Proteomics,
6(12), 3649-3664.
·
Nelson, C. J., Hegeman, A. D., Harms, A.
C., and Sussman, M. R. (2006) A quantitative analysis of Arabidopsis
plasma membrane using trypsin-catalyzed 18O labeling. Mol.
Cell Proteomics, 5(8), 1382-1395.
·
Pischke, M. S., Huttlin, E. L., Hegeman,
A. D., and Sussman, M. R. (2006) A transcriptome-based characterization of
habituation in plant tissue culture. Plant Physiol. 140(4),
1255-78.
·
Frey, P. A., Hegeman, A. D., and
Reed, G. H. (2006) Free radical mechanisms in enzymology, Chem. Rev. 106(8),
3302-16.
·
Hegeman, A. D., Harms, A. C., Bunner, A.
E., Harper, J. F., and Sussman, M. R. (2004) An isotope labeling
strategy for quantifying the degree of phosphorylation at multiple sites in
proteins, J. Am. Soc. Mass Spec. 15(5), 647-653.
Textbook
·
Frey, P. A., and Hegeman, A. D., Enzymatic
Reaction Mechanisms, January 27, 2007, Oxford University Press, New York,
NY.
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